Impact. It means changing the face of our school, our discipline, our profession, our communities and our world. As this report showcases, your investment in impact allows Penn Nursing to provide the very best in nursing education, research and practice. We hope you will join us as we continue to Care to Change the World.速 To find out more about investing in impact, please contact: Wylie Thomas Vice Dean, Institutional Advancement Office of Institutional Advancement University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing Claire M. Fagin Hall Philadelphia, PA 19104-4217
215.898.4841
Photography I. George Bilyk, Sarah Bloom, Karen Gowen, Wendy Grube, Melissa Hassey, Nikki Marshall Design Dale Parenti Design
IMPACT
wthomas@nursing.upenn.edu
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418 Curie Boulevard
Impact.
Penn Nursing: Making History in 2012
It means changing the face of our school, our discipline, our profession, our communities and our world. As this report showcases, your investment in impact allows Penn Nursing to provide the very best in nursing education, research and practice. We hope you will join us as we continue to Care to Change the World.®
#8 of the Top 10 New Findings in Parenting (Time Magazine). Research conducted by Penn Nursing’s Dr. Jennifer Pinto-Martin revealed that premature babies are five times as likely as babies born at a normal weight to be diagnosed with an autism-spectrum disorder (ASD).
To find out more about investing in impact, please contact:
1 of the Top 10 College Women (Glamour Magazine). Penn Nursing senior Yali Derman was recognized for turning a childhood illness into a passion for supporting an arts facility at the hospital where she was treated. Yali makes one of a kind designer bags with all proceeds being donated.
knowledge and research on healthcare and nursing to increase our understanding of the past and develop effective health policy and patient care strategies for today.
1st Lady Michele Obama (and 2nd Lady Dr. Jill Biden) traveled to Penn Nursing in April to announce that nurses will be a key part of the national Joining Forces initiative to help military service members and their families cope with PTSD and traumatic brain injury.
10 teams comprised of students, faculty and staff from nursing, engineering, computer science, law, medicine, and business competed in Penn Nursing’s Inaugural Game Solutions for Healthcare Symposium. The teams created applications (apps), games and other innovations to address healthcare issues including a child weight management game; a website for cancer patients to track their treatment and outcomes; an app to help adolescents manage diabetes; a social integration game for returning veterans; and a simulated game for adolescent mothers to learn about breast feeding.
125 years of Nursing at Penn was celebrated throughout the year recognizing the contributions of Penn Nursing graduates who Care to Change the World!
Office of Institutional Advancement University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing Claire M. Fagin Hall 418 Curie Boulevard Philadelphia, PA 19104-4217 wthomas@nursing.upenn.edu 215.898.4841
IMPACT
the Study of the History of Nursing celebrated 25 years of generating historical
Vice Dean, Institutional Advancement
DONORS
25 years. The Barbara Bates Center for
Wylie Thomas
Fiscal Year 2012 Impact Report Donor Listing
Thank you! The University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing wishes to thank the following donors. This listing includes donors with cumulative giving totals of $250 and higher in commitments and gifts from July 1, 2011 to June 30, 2012.
Photography I. George Bilyk, Sarah Bloom, Karen Gowen, Wendy Grube, Melissa Hassey, Nikki Marshall Design Dale Parenti Design
Penn Nursing Leading us into the Future
Today, our students, faculty, and alumni continue to lead the charge to improve healthcare through a myriad of discoveries and innovations, the integration of technology and education, and advocacy for policy to improve lives. As our nation tackles the tough questions surrounding healthcare reform, physical and mental healthcare for our returning soldiers, chronically ill adults, our aging parents, and our most vulnerable children, its leaders look to Penn Nursing for solutions. At the onset of the healthcare reform debate, leading Penn Nursing researchers testified before Congress about the public health, economic and social impacts on hospital admission and readmission. This past spring, First Lady Michelle Obama turned to Penn Nursing to lead a nurse-driven, national effort to identify, treat, and conduct research on post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury amongst returning service members. And today, our faculty, alumni, and budding nurses are charting the course that will be necessary to address the challenges for patients, hospitals and communities with or without the implementation of the Affordable Care Act.
As Dean of the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, I am proud that support from alumni and friends like you have inspired, energized and strengthened our ability to make a difference in healthcare locally, nationally, and globally. I hope that the stories contained in this annual report demonstrate the impact you have had on the future of nursing education, research, and practice across the globe. In the final year of the University’s Making History campaign, you have positioned us to respond to the most pressing health challenges of our time. Penn nurses have always made history. Today, with your help, they are leading us into the future.
Afaf I. Meleis, PhD, DRPS(hon), FAAN, FRCN Margaret Bond Simon Dean of Nursing
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IMPACT
Welcome to the future of healthcare. At no time in history has the cost, delivery, and efficiency of care been more under the microscope and more hanging in the balance. Like explorers discovering a new frontier, we must create maps as we go and build the tools necessary to thrive in uncharted territory. In this brave new world, Penn Nurses are our guides.
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Today, Penn Nurses literally care to change 030 the world, with alumni living in 42 distinct countries outside of 0 the United States including Ghana, New Zealand, and Pakistan. As our dedicated 33 faculty work to prepare the next generation of globally-minded nurse leaders, they model our commitment to global engagement through active international research with more than 30 nations. And, as Penn Nursing continues to lead the charge to improve lives, our newly launched, pioneering Center for Global Women’s Health serves as a national and international focal point for the generation and translation of research that promotes the health of women, girls and their families worldwide. Support for our global initiatives has positioned Penn Nursing to address the challenges we face today, anticipate the challenges of tomorrow, and discover solutions to address them all.
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0 While groundbreaking research from CGWH addresses these major challenges through scientific investigation, Penn alumni have joined together to promote health and progress in their local and global communities. The Healthy Cities: Healthy Women initiative is bringing together alumni and experts around the United States and abroad for cutting-edge discussions to promote healthy urban environments for women, their families, and their communities, and to highlight Penn’s pioneering role in this new discipline. To date, Healthy Cities: Healthy Women has engaged alumni in Miami and New York. This November, the city of Los Angeles will join the initiative in a day-long conference featuring actress Halle Berry. With momentum for these grass-roots efforts growing, the School of Nursing is actively engaged in the planning stages for similar events in Washington, D.C., London, and Mumbai. For more information on women’s health events or research, please visit www. nursing.upenn.edu/healthywomen or call the Office of Institutional Advancement at 215-898-4841.
0 award – much like our new “This 21Global Women’s Health – Center for 0 is a symbol of the and of 20School’s 0 my life’s goal to make a measureable 190 180
difference in the health of women and girls across the globe,” said Meleis, who has been a global women’s health advocate for more than 30 years. “As a girl growing up in Egypt, I could have only imagined this kind of impact and legacy, and it is because of the support of some incredible and visionary people that this legacy will live at the University of Pennsylvania.” In addition, generous endowment contributions from Nancy L. Adelson, Nu’78 and Andrew S. Adelson, W’77,
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14 and WG’78; Kim R. Dickstein, W’87 Jordan Dickstein; Elizabeth Kehler 0 15 and Dean Kehler, W’79; Patricia 160 C’81 and Howard B.1Silverstein, 70 A. Silverstein, W’69; and Susan Drossman Sokoloff, C’84 and Adam D. Sokoloff, W’84 have positioned Penn Nursing to affect change in families, communities and countries through empowering women, promoting health and safety, advancing advocacy, and preventing disease. Together this support has built a strong foundation the Center for Global Women’s Health – an endowment of more than $4 million toward a goal of $13 million plus to ensure the Center is sustainable and prolific far into the future.
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For Dr. Afaf I. Meleis, Margaret Bond Simon Dean of Nursing, bestowing the School’s first ever international award carries powerful and personal meaning.
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Making a Measurable Difference for Women and Girls
Marilyn Sommers, PhD, RN, FAAN, Nu’72, Lillian S. Brunner Professor of Medical-Surgical Nursing and Director of the Center for Global Women’s Health sits with a young girl in a health clinic in Chalkidiki, Greece as part of the Center’s partnership with the Ormylia Foundation aimed at improving the health of women and girls.
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Perhaps one of the most lasting legacies of Dr. Hassan was the passion for nursing she imparted to her daughter, Afaf Meleis. Today, as the Margaret Bond Simon Dean of the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, Dr. Afaf I. Meleis continues to be inspired by the humanistic commitment, inquisitiveness, and autonomy of her late mother, remembering that her nursing career was made possible through a scholarship to study nursing in the United States. And thanks to the generous establishment of a visiting global scholars fund at Penn Nursing, the legacy of a mother will give rise to nursing leaders of tomorrow around the world.
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For two years, Dr. Soad Hussein U.S. Ambassador Martin J. Silverstein, Hassan sacrificed everything she ret., GL’08, and Audrey J. Silverstein, knew to become a nurse – leaving her C’82, have created the Soad Hussein family and children in Egypt, where no Hassan Visiting Global Scholar baccalaureate nursing degree could Endowed Fund at the University of be had, to earn one in the United Pennsylvania School of Nursing, which States. Armed with this degree, creates the opportunity each year for 0 15 210 Dr. Hassan continued her bold pursuit global scholars or experts to take part of education in her native Egypt, in school-based programs, 18 lectures, 0 2 becoming the first Egyptian nurse classes, and to collaborate with Penn 0 20 14 to earn a Master’s degree in Public Nursing’s faculty and students. 2 0 Health and the first to earn a doctorate 10 15 “The 2impact of Dr. Hassan’s life and Dr.0Meleis dedicated her book, at an Egyptian university. As a 0 6 1Theoretical the gifts0it continues to bring to this 1 Nursing, to her 0 9 7 0 1 pioneer in global women’s health and 180 world set an example for all of us,” mother, Dr. Soad Hussein Hassan nursing, Dr. Hassan broke academic (pictured below), describing her said Ambassador Silverstein. “It boundaries in Egypt, establishing as “a maverick – for exemplifying is our hope that this visiting global the Maadrasit El Hakemaat Training humanism and commitment, scholars program provides a platform School for Nurses, the first school for encouraging feminism for international growth in nursing, and autonomy, for accepting separate from hospital auspices in the healthcare, and beyond.” challenge and diversity, for Middle East. From that beginning, she tolerating rebellion, for sponsoring continued to establish and lead many inquisitiveness, and for being other schools in Egypt, Kuwait and my mother.” Saudi Arabia.
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Teacher with young girls in southern Egypt.
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In 1887, the first class of graduating nurses at Penn had to provide their own thermometers, scissors, pins, and pin cushion. Today, each student has access to electronic health records, iPads, 3 and real-to-life simulated hospital rooms. As we evolve our efforts, techniques, and technologies to extend the reach of what our nurses can learn, discover, and heal, Penn Nursing remains committed to advancing our understanding of the human and societal conditions that shape our care. Support from our alumni, friends, faculty, and parents continues to shape the future of nursing.
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Unique problems require unique solutions. From national healthcare reform to global health crises the complex challenges of our time require an increasing focus on innovation with an interdisciplinary twist.
To date, this unique program has graduated more than 60 healthcare business leaders who have gone on to pursue transformational opportunities to improve lives, including work for Medtronic, McKinsey & Company, the Clinton Foundation, UCLA Medical Center, Credit Suisse, and even in Hollywood. For current Nursing/Wharton dual degree student, Mihir Khokhani Nu’13, W’13, the challenging program is ideal for his future goals. “Healthcare is a business and, for me, the clinical knowledge and experience I am getting at Penn Nursing is integral to knowing, and one day improving, that business. My long term goal is to work in hospital administration, and to improve the delivery of care; I know I will be applying what I learned at Wharton and at Penn Nursing to achieve that goal.”
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Students and alumni like these underscore the critical need for educational support and opportunities to prepare innovative and interdisciplinary healthcare leaders. Jan A. Sigmon, C’82, and her husband Andrew L. Dworkin, C’81, answered that call. Students enrolled in the Nursing/ Wharton program, including eight incoming freshman, will now have the opportunity to receive support from the newly-created Jan A. Sigmon and Andrew L. Dworkin Endowed Scholarship. “Penn Nursing is undergoing a practical and intellectual renaissance; it has absolutely redefined nursing and what is possible through that discipline,” said Sigmon. “Loving Penn as much as our family does, and fully understanding the unique power of Penn’s institutionalized dual degree programs like the Nursing/Wharton Program, how could my husband and I not extend ourselves and our philanthropy to this extraordinary opportunity for deserving students?”
IMPACT
Since 1997, Penn Nursing and the Wharton School of Business have offered a coordinated dual degree program that addresses the dynamic changes in the delivery and financing of healthcare services in the United States and abroad. Combining a Bachelor of Science in Nursing with a Bachelor of Science in Economics, the Nursing and Healthcare Management Dual Degree Program offers a curriculum designed to develop leaders in healthcare administration and addresses concerns about the quality, cost, and management of healthcare worldwide.
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Mihir Khokhani Nu’13, W’13 believes that his nursing education and the clinical experiences, in particular, will provide him with a powerful perspective – one that he plans to use to improve the business of healthcare.
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Helping to bring to life the School’s innovative teaching methods and learning technology, the simulation spaces are designed to reflect real-life care settings, including emergency, home care, and hospital. In addition, each simulation space is outfitted with video systems to record students’ simulation experiences, allowing for debriefing and reflection. One Penn Nursing undergraduate student views the new simulation facilities as so revolutionary for nursing education that she inspired her family’s Cascade Foundation to support the purchase of a simulated teenage patient, simulated infant patient, a pediatric exam table, two hospital beds and a code cart.
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“I know what a difference this makes in my own preparation for real-world care,” said the student, who asked to remain anonymous. “I want generations of Penn Nurses to have access to the most advanced and relevant educational tools.” Starting this fall, students will engage in a much more in-depth level of simulation learning with new topof-the-line simulated patients and transformational video technology for reflective learning. These state-of-theart learning tools will be integrated with fundamental coursework and essential competencies to provide budding nurses with a challenging but safe opportunity to review and assess the effectiveness of their skills, diagnostic instincts, and efficiency.
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High-tech, high-touch simulation space has almost doubled at Penn Nursing. Renovations to the first floor of Claire M. Fagin Hall, newly named the Helene Fuld Pavilion for Innovative Learning, expanded the School’s simulation space to 7,000 square feet to better prepare students for the real-life nursing experience, thanks to the generous support of the Cascade Foundation; the Helene Fuld Health Trust, HSBC Bank, USA, N.A.; the Connelly Foundation; Robert Roy; and Vivian Piasecki.
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Penn Nursing seniors, Lisa Sileo (left) and Jessica Yang, test one of the newest additions to the Helene Fuld Pavilion for Innovative Learning, SimJunior®, an interactive pediatric simulator.
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Dr. Patricia Martín, M’85, sees ethnic O every diversity among her patients day. At the same time, she is struck by the lack of diversity among the nurses and healthcare providers. As the U.S. population becomes increasingly more diverse, the nursing profession is struggling to ensure its workforce mirrors the patient population and has the ability to provide quality, culturally competent patient care. Dr. Martín, a member of Penn Nursing’s Board of Overseers, wants to change that. That’s why she established the Ignacio and Elena Martín Endowed Fellowship to provide financial support to a graduate student who otherwise would be unable to meet the cost of a Penn education and to support the University’s educational policy of promoting student body diversity.
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While completing a pre-med program United States with just pennies in my OH in Guatemala, Antonette worked for pockets, and I needed help to follow a program called Primeros Pasos H Cmy dream. Penn Nursing gave me 3 (“First Steps”) teaching children and that opportunity.” families basic hygiene and nutrition. Today, thanks to scholarship support That experience, she said, was like that provided by Patricia Martín, instrumental in opening her eyes to Antonette is completing her Master’s the power of nursing. degree in nursing and strongly “Helping these kids felt so great, and considering her PhD – a goal she the light bulb came on that this is only imagined after discovering the what is going to help me to combine opportunities and diverse nurse education and clinical skills into my leaders at Penn. dream career,” said Antonette. “But I was also about to go back to the
“Penn Nursing is leading our nation in innovative education, research, and practice,” said Dr. Martín. “But we also want to lead the way in recruiting under-represented minorities and facilitating their access to the critically important profession of nursing so that when you walk into a hospital, a clinic, or a school of nursing, you feel people truly understand how to give you the best care.” In addition, this newly-created scholarship places a much-needed emphasis on support for graduate and second degree students like Antonette Shaw, Nu’11, GNu’13. After a 3-year trip to Guatemala, Antonette, whose mother is from the Bahamas, discovered the perfect career to combine her passions for education, language and healing: nursing. While in Santiago, Guatemala, Antonette Shaw, Nu’11, GNu’13, conducted a check-up on a young boy who identified himself as “the man of the house”. Even with a cold and upset stomach, he was more concerned for his mother’s well-being than his own. To read more about this interaction, go to www.nursing.upenn.edu/ouralumni
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ADVANCING SCIENCE TO INFLUENCE POLICY 400
By day, nurses are care providers, educators and researchers amidst charts, textbooks and test tubes. But under their scrubs and lab coats are the suits of congressional experts, state chairmen, and policy writers. This year alone, Penn Nursing faculty and alumni have testified to inform national legislation, have been named among the most influential scientists in the country, and have made groundbreaking discoveries related to our world’s greatest health challenges. Alumni and friends make it possible to see Penn Nursing Science highlighted in Time Magazine and leading national foundations like Robert Wood Johnson. With our powers combined, faculty, students, and alumni continue to make our world a safer and healthier place to live.
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The patient complains of chest pain. He reports shortness of breath, 50 tingling sensations in his right arm, and an elevated heart rate. And, if you 0 don’t get him the help he needs, he will die 25 years before a man of his J F age should.
interviewing that are beyond taking vital signs and what our nurses can detect with a stethoscope.”
and medical systems. Courses in advanced anatomy and physiology, neuroscience, psychopharmacology, and theory and practice of psychotherapy give these nurses the tools they need to work with patients, S O N D J F physicians, and families to deliver the most effective and efficient care.
This lesson remains elusive in most nursing classrooms and care settings across the country as practitioners focus on their own silos of caregiving, according to Hanrahan. She hopes to change that reality in favor of an integrated physical and mental health approach more in line with the future of nursing. “The cognitive and emotional processes of individuals with mental illness can complicate even the best quality care,” said Hanrahan. “That’s why we are dedicated to teaching nurses skills such as cognitive behavioral therapy and motivational
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Thanks to one of the greatest champions of innovation in nursing, Elizabeth MCarol A M Ware,J Nu’73, J PennA Nursing is actively embracing and advocating for excellence in mental When Dr. Nancy Hanrahan, GR’04, health nursing. With a recent $5 million As we look to the future of healthcare, presents this scenario to her gift, Ware established the Carol E. undergraduate nursing students, 98 evidence is mounting that mental percent of them will conclude that the Ware Professorship in Mental Health health significantly impacts the Nursing, the Dr. Dorothy Mereness patient is experiencing a heart-related physical healing process. Nurses are Endowed Research Fund and the event. And they would be wrong. This uniquely positioned to integrate care Gladys H. Gutman Endowed Fellowship and reduce this vulnerability at the scenario depicts a panic attack. in Mental Health Nursing, which will onset, treatment, and recovery of Studies show that persons who attract the kind of outstanding faculty trauma and illness. present primarily with symptoms and students critical to advancing of mental illness such as anxiety or “So often, nurses are at the front mental health nursing. depression are underdiagnosed and lines of care,” emphasized Hanrahan. At the graduate level, Penn Nursing’s undertreated. And for individuals “And it is my mission to convey to our Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner Program students that the best weapon in their with serious mental illnesses such prepares students to bridge the as schizophrenia this is compounded arsenal is an open mind.” divide between the mental health by being stigmatized to the point that they die on average 25 years earlier than the general population, from Nancy P. Hanrahan, PhD, RN, CS, FAAN, Dr. Lenore H. Kurlowicz Term Associate Professor of Nursing at Penn is a national treatable illnesses. To address the leader in psychiatric mental health nursing known for her work ubiquitous nature of mental illness, all documenting the psychiatric nurse workforce and her expertise nurses need the tools to assess and in system-level mental health services research. treat symptoms of mental illness.
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150 The Power Of Policy 100 50
As the head of Pennsylvania’s Office of Healthcare Reform 0 under Governor Edward G. Rendell, Rosemarie B. Greco was charged with improving J F healthcare for all, making its systems more efficient, and containing its costs – seemingly impossible tasks made possible by focusing on the power of nurses. Under Greco’s leadership, historic Prescription for PA legislation was proposed, passed, and signed into law right here at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing. That legislation provided a set of integrated practical strategies for improving healthcare for all Pennsylvanians,
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allowing nurse practitioners to maximize their scope of practice, requiring every hospital emergency MroomAto have Mnon-emergency J J A care clinics run by nurses, offering incentives for nurse-run clinics to provide care on nights and weekends for increased access to care, and more. Following her transformational leadership in the Office of Healthcare Reform, Greco continued to shine a light on Penn Nursing and its impact on nursing and healthcare, serving as the Chair of the School’s Board of Overseers for the past four years. To honor Greco’s drive to improve healthcare policy and her advocacy
of nursing practice, the Exelon Corporation recently established an endowed term chair in her honor S to provide O financial N Dsupport J to anF assistant professor at the School of Nursing with an interest in advocacy. “I have heard and seen so many tremendous advancements in the nursing profession and throughout healthcare because of the efforts of nurse leaders here at Penn,” said Greco. “When I read anything about healthcare legislation, I am almost guaranteed to find within it the voice and expertise of a Penn Nurse.”
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350 300 250 Each day, veteran and up-and-coming 200 policy experts like Assistant Professor of Nursing, Matthew 150 D. McHugh, GNC’94, GNu’98, GR’04, build bridges 100and Washington, between Fagin Hall D.C. In 2011, McHugh published a 50 in Health Affairs, groundbreaking study revealing that controversial legislation 0 ratios added setting nurse-to-patient that can make a difference,” he said. more registered nurses to the hospital “I learned from day one that Penn MNurses A are M J Jwith the A staffing mix, not fewer asJfeared.F change-makers power to turn scientific discovery into national discourse. Supporting the continuation of that legacy is perhaps the most important thing we can give to this School, the nursing profession, and our country.”
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On April 11, 2012 First Lady Michelle Obama and Dr. Jill Biden traveled to Penn Nursing to announce a commitment from more than 150 of America’s leading nursing organizations and more than 450 nursing schools to ensure that nurses are prepared to help military service members and their families cope with post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury.
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As a student and now a member of the Penn Nursing faculty, McHugh says that the School of Nursing taught him more than healthcare analytics. “Faculty here take a personal interest in cultivating the kind of inquisitiveness
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Matthew D, McHugh, PhD, JD, MPH, RN, CRNP, Assistant Professor of Nursing at N Dthe University J Fof M Pennsyvlania, is a public health policy researcher whose work integrates expertise in nursing, law, and public health.
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Over the past eight years, Penn Nursing’s home, Claire M. Fagin Hall, has undergone a physical transformation, thanks to a multi-phased renovation that improved each floor in the building. Some of the greatest transformations included the expansion and enhancement of the School’s learning and research laboratories.
The Anatomy and Physiology Laboratory underwent a transformation in the summer of 2011. Gone are the long lab benches that restricted interaction between student and instructor, replaced with small group tables that house iPads and innovative teaching applications. Associate Professor Dr. Connie Scanga manages the iPads remotely, seamlessly conveying information and answering questions. A projection microscope enables her to project images directly onto a blackboard-sized screen. This allows students to see precisely what she is describing, be it a molecular structure or a dissection sample, creating a more unified and effective learning experience.
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As part of the Center for Biobehavioral Research, the Biobehavioral Research Laboratory hosts state-of-the-art equipment enabling faculty members and doctoral students to conduct interdisciplinary research. The laboratory is home to research in areas including sleep, nutrition/ metabolism, environmental science, neuroscience, and genetics/human development.
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The latest renovations resulted in a 35% increase in the School’s simulation learning facilities, adding high fidelity simulation and new evaluative techniques. The newlynamed Helene Fuld Pavilion for Innovative Learning includes new computer and audio/visual systems, the newest patient simulators, and five high-fidelity simulation rooms including a home care suite. The renovations included upgrades to the general skills lab and the Brunner lab where students learn and practice tasks such as blood draws and monitoring. Video recording of student simulation experiences is a key component that allows for reflection and debriefing so students can see how they handled particular patient scenarios and discuss with faculty how they can improve care and technique.
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Penn Nursing Profile Fiscal Year 2012 Fiscal Facts
Research and Projects $17 million Education and General Operations $40 million Practice $38 million Total Annual Budget $95 million Endowment (Market Value)
$60.3 million
Philanthropy: Total Giving for FY12 Donors
$11.4 million 1,233
Research and Projects
Education and General Operations Practice
NIH Awards
Supporting Research and Education
%
Total Sponsored Project Awards NIH Awards
$12 million $5.33 million
Faculty and Staff
58 Endowed Scholarships
Faculty Chairs:
87% Undergraduates Receive Financial Aid 98% MSN Candidates Receive Financial Aid
13 Full Endowed 1 Penn Integrates Knowledge 12 Term Endowed 3 Term 59 62 25 194
Standing Faculty Associated Faculty Full-time Lecturers Part-time Lecturers
119 Administrative Staff – Fagin Hall 123 Administrative Staff – LIFE Program
Local/Global Partnerships
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Associated Faculty
Graduate Professional
1 449 11 12 188 42
Full-Time Lecturers Part-Time Lecturers
School-run community practice (LIFE) LIFE members Study abroad programs in 9 countries Countries with collaborative international projects Nursing Alumni live/work abroad Countries home to alumni
Educating Nurses Number of students in: 555 Undergraduate Degree Programs 485 Graduate Professional or Other Degree Programs 63 PhD Degree Programs 1,183 Total Students 15,080 Alumni (13,620 living)
Study Abroad International Partnerships
Research Centers Barbara Bates Center for the Study of the History of Nursing Center for Biobehavioral Research Center for Global Women’s Health Center for Health Equity Research Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research Center for Integrated Science in Aging NewCourtland Center for Transitions and Health CDC Supported Center for Autism and Developmental Disabilities Research and Epidemiology
Board of Overseers Executive Committee Dean Kehler, Chair Rosemarie Greco, Past Chair Honorable Marjorie O. Rendell
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Penn Nursing Leadership Afaf I. Meleis, PhD, DrPS(hon), FAAN, FRCN Margaret Bond Simon Dean of Nursing Professor of Nursing and Sociology Patricia D’Antonio, PhD, RN, FAAN Chair, Department of Family and Community Health Associate Professor of Nursing Jennifer A. Pinto-Martin, PhD, MPH, Chair, Department of Behavioral Health and Sciences Viola MacInnes/Independence Professor in Nursing
Kathleen M. McCauley, PhD, RN, ACNC-BC, FAAN, FAHA Associate Dean for Academic Programs 1965 25th Reunion Term Professor of Cardiovascular Nursing Yvonne Paterson, PhD, FAAM, FAAAS Associate Dean for Research, School of Nursing Professor of Microbiology, School of Medicine
Impact.
Penn Nursing: Making History in 2012
It means changing the face of our school, our discipline, our profession, our communities and our world. As this report showcases, your investment in impact allows Penn Nursing to provide the very best in nursing education, research and practice. We hope you will join us as we continue to Care to Change the World.®
#8 of the Top 10 New Findings in Parenting (Time Magazine). Research conducted by Penn Nursing’s Dr. Jennifer Pinto-Martin revealed that premature babies are five times as likely as babies born at a normal weight to be diagnosed with an autism-spectrum disorder (ASD).
To find out more about investing in impact, please contact:
1 of the Top 10 College Women (Glamour Magazine). Penn Nursing senior Yali Derman was recognized for turning a childhood illness into a passion for supporting an arts facility at the hospital where she was treated. Yali makes one of a kind designer bags with all proceeds being donated.
knowledge and research on healthcare and nursing to increase our understanding of the past and develop effective health policy and patient care strategies for today.
1st Lady Michele Obama (and 2nd Lady Dr. Jill Biden) traveled to Penn Nursing in April to announce that nurses will be a key part of the national Joining Forces initiative to help military service members and their families cope with PTSD and traumatic brain injury.
10 teams comprised of students, faculty and staff from nursing, engineering, computer science, law, medicine, and business competed in Penn Nursing’s Inaugural Game Solutions for Healthcare Symposium. The teams created applications (apps), games and other innovations to address healthcare issues including a child weight management game; a website for cancer patients to track their treatment and outcomes; an app to help adolescents manage diabetes; a social integration game for returning veterans; and a simulated game for adolescent mothers to learn about breast feeding.
125 years of Nursing at Penn was celebrated throughout the year recognizing the contributions of Penn Nursing graduates who Care to Change the World!
Office of Institutional Advancement University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing Claire M. Fagin Hall 418 Curie Boulevard Philadelphia, PA 19104-4217 wthomas@nursing.upenn.edu 215.898.4841
IMPACT
the Study of the History of Nursing celebrated 25 years of generating historical
Vice Dean, Institutional Advancement
DONORS
25 years. The Barbara Bates Center for
Wylie Thomas
Fiscal Year 2012 Impact Report Donor Listing
Thank you! The University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing wishes to thank the following donors. This listing includes donors with cumulative giving totals of $250 and higher in commitments and gifts from July 1, 2011 to June 30, 2012.
Photography I. George Bilyk, Sarah Bloom, Karen Gowen, Wendy Grube, Melissa Hassey, Nikki Marshall Design Dale Parenti Design
Impact. It means changing the face of our school, our discipline, our profession, our communities and our world. As this report showcases, your investment in impact allows Penn Nursing to provide the very best in nursing education, research and practice. We hope you will join us as we continue to Care to Change the World.速 To find out more about investing in impact, please contact: Wylie Thomas Vice Dean, Institutional Advancement Office of Institutional Advancement University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing Claire M. Fagin Hall Philadelphia, PA 19104-4217
215.898.4841
Photography I. George Bilyk, Sarah Bloom, Karen Gowen, Wendy Grube, Melissa Hassey, Nikki Marshall Design Dale Parenti Design
IMPACT
wthomas@nursing.upenn.edu
IMPACT
418 Curie Boulevard
DONORS
Fiscal Year 2012 Impact Report Donor Listing Thank you! The University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing wishes to thank the following donors. This listing includes donors with cumulative giving totals of $250 and higher in commitments and gifts from July 1, 2011 to June 30, 2012.
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Thank You! $1,000,000 + 1675 Foundation Helene Fuld Trust, HSBC Bank USA, N.A. Say Yes To Education, Inc. Carol E. Ware, Nu’73 Marian S. Ware Charitable Lead Annuity Trust George A. Weiss, W’65 $500,000 - $999,999 The Rita and Alex Hillman Foundation Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Ellen Hershey Kapito, Nu’79 and Robert S. Kapito, W’79 Kapito Family Philanthropic Fund Robert D. Roy, W’59 $100,000 - $499,999 American Academy of Nursing Anonymous (3) Edith Baldinger Trust Carol Lefkowitz Boas, Nu’77 and Andrew M. Boas Estate of Walter Camenisch, Jr., W’46 Exelon Corporation Debbie Gartenberg Rosemarie B. Greco The John A. Hartford Foundation Barbara G. Heyman and Stephen J. Heyman, W’59 The Hirair and Anna Hovnanian Foundation, Inc. Edele Hovnanian, EAS’81, W’81 Independence Blue Cross Jonas Center for Nursing Excelllence Elizabeth and Dean C. Kehler, W’79 Andrea Berry Laporte, Nu’69 and John H. Laporte Gordon E. & Betty I. Moore Foundation Estate of Richard Nicholls Beatrice Renfield Foundation Jean Renfield-Miller Ralph F. Reynolds, W’84 Estate of Estelle and George H. Sands Jeffrey Sands George H. and Estelle M. Sands Foundation Estate of Jessie M. Scott, ED’43, HON’83 Jan A. Sigmon, C’82 and Andrew L. Dworkin, C’81 Audrey J. Silverstein, C’82 and Martin J. Silverstein, GL’08 Patricia B. Silverstein, C’81 and Howard A. Silverstein, W’69 Howard A. Silverstein Foundation Susan Drossman Sokoloff, C’84 and Adam D. Sokoloff, W’84 Marian S. Ware Charitable Giving Fund
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$10,000 - $99,999 Nancy L. Adelson, Nu’78 and Andrew S. Adelson, W’77, WG’78 Adelson Family Foundation Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation American Association of Colleges of Nursing American Cancer Society American Nurses Foundation Inc. Anonymous (3) Aspen Institute A.S.P.E.N. Rhoads Research Foundation Ann C. and J. Mark Baiada Carolyn E. Bennett, Nu’91 and Thomas L. Bennett Alice Saligman Brinkmann Solomon and Sylvia Bronstein Foundation Cascade Foundation Linda M. Censits and Richard J. Censits, W’58 Ruth M. and Tristram C. Colket, Jr., CGS’63 Eleanor L. Davis, Nu’82 and Harold M. Davis Dorothy J. Del Bueno Kim R. Dickstein, W’87 and Jordan Dickstein Ashley D. Dreyfus, C’11 Gloria Shenosky Drosdick and Jack Drosdick John and Gloria Drosdick Fund Susan Hills Floyd, CW’67 and William R. Floyd, Jr., C’67, WG’69 Foundation for Long Term Care Frank Morgan Jones Fund Melissa D. and John F. Gamba, Jr., C’92 Beth Gamba Steel Mary Anne S. Gamba, HUP’65, G’84 and John F. Gamba, W’61 Gamba Family Foundation
The late Ruth A. Goldner, Nu’59 Bryan E. Gordon, W’83 Herbert and Roseline Gussman Foundation Elaine A. Hoi, Nu’11 Katherine Liu Hoi, Nu’80, GNu’86 and Thomas C. Hoi Barbara and Donald A. Jonas Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation International Patricia Kind Sallie G. and Berton E. Korman, AR’55 Larking Hill Foundation Joan E. Lynaugh Patricia Martin, M’85 and Kevin R. Bannon, C’76 Marian B. Matez, CW’57 and Jerome M. Matez, W’53 Laura Kind McKenna, GNu’81 Elizabeth R. Moran Melanie Franco Nussdorf, CW’71 and Lawrence C. Nussdorf, W’68 Krista Pinola, Nu’86 and Richard J. Pinola Philadelphia Health Care Trust Research Foundation for Mental Hygiene Inc. Marcia and Philip H. Rothblum, W’43 Marcia & Philip Rothblum Foundation The late Dulcy Sacan, GNu’11 Arden V. Saligman, C’87 and Ira M. Saligman, CGS’99 Robert Saligman Charitable Foundation Sandra Beeber Samberg, Nu’94, GNu’95 and Joseph Samberg Joe and Sandy Samberg Foundation, Inc. Marjorie Stock Neville E. Strumpf Visiting Nurse Service of New York Marla W. Wasserman, C’90, L’93 Jeffrey M. Weingarten, W’70 Weingarten Family Foundation
The Theresa I. Lynch Society, honoring the pioneering leadership of Dean Lynch, recognizes those who understand the critical need for support of new technologies, innovative programming, sophisticated outreach and enhanced facilities in order to sustain Penn Nursing’s leadership in research, education and practice. Membership in the Society is extended to all donors of $1,000 or more over the course of the academic year to any School of Nursing fund. For recent graduates (those who received their first Penn Nursing degree within 10 years), the qualifying cumulative gift is $500.
$5,000 - $9,999 American Academy of Nurse Practitioners Anonymous Estate of Barbara Bates Anthony J. Buividas, WG’79 Ada Garcia-Casellas and Gilbert F. Casellas, L’77 Lee S. Doty, W’76 and George E. Doty, W’76 Wendy and Richard E. Levine, C’81, M’85, GM’89 Anne M. Morrissey Ann L. O’Sullivan, Nu’70, GNu’72, GR’84 Marie L. Piekarski, Nu’52, GED’57 Marjorie O. Rendell, CW’69 Marie A. Savard, HUP’70, Nu’72, M’76 and Bradley Wayne Fenton, INT’79 Emily L. Sherwood, CW’73 and Ned L. Sherwood, W’71 Michael L. Wert and Susan K. Wert Michael L. and Susan K. Wert Foundation $2,500 - $4,999 Susan Weiss Behrend, Nu’80, GNu’86, and Daniel B. Behrend, WG’71 Barbara Brodie Vicky L. Brown, Nu’84 Charles Foundation Doty Family Foundation Faholo Foundation Julie Schauer Fairman, GNu’80, GRN’92 and Ronald M. Fairman, FEL’84 Marion Laffey Fox, Nu’61 and Reeder R. Fox Karen M. Fried, GNu’83 Mary Ann Pomeroy Glocker, Nu’64, GNu’86 and Karl Glocker N. Peter Hamilton, G’04 Hannah L. Henderson Seana L. and John D. Holtz John & Seana Holtz Foundation Gail Kass Pedie Killebrew, CW’61 and Robert S. Killebrew, Jr., WG’64 Eunice Searles King, Nu’71 and David R. King, C’72 Patsy A. Lehr, GNu’86 William H. and Patti A. Lehr Foundation Sandra B. Lewenson Bryan H. Lipinski, Nu’82 Ruth Lubic, HUP’55, HON’85 and William J. Lubic, L52 Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Neuroscience Nursing Foundation Pediatric Endocrinology Nursing Society Vivian W. Piasecki Piasecki Family Foundation Anne Salamone Rooke, GNu’80 Lynette Y. Snow, GNu’85 and David Snow Albert K. Tang United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania Barbra M. Wall
$1,000 - $2,499 Robert J. Alig, C’84, WG’87 and Gwenn Danet-Desnoyers The Alumni Association of The Albert Einstein Medical Center William J. Avery Avery Foundation Ellen Davidson Baer and Henry P. Baer Jane Herman Barnsteiner, Nu’70, GNu’73 Greta L. Flickinger, GNu’85 Phyllis W. and Aaron T. Beck Kristin A. Bennett, GNu’83 and Karl E. Bennett Lewis W. Bluemle, Jr., INT’52 Barbara P. Brathwaite, GNu’93 Vivian W. Carrion, GNu’93 Shirley Sears Chater, HUP’53, Nu’56, HON’97 Carla Weil Cohen, Nu’75, GNu’77 and Robert E. Cohen, GM’77 Connelly Foundation Paul R. Dalmonte Patricia O. D’Antonio, GRN’92 and Joseph C. D’Antonio, GM’81 Joanne Disch Bridget T. Doerr, GRN’84 Emmett and Bridget Doerr Charitable Trust Lois K. Evans Fieldstone 1793 Foundation Penny Grossman Fox, ED’53 and Robert A. Fox, C’52 Janice M. Gian-Grasso, GNu’77 and Joseph E. Gian-Grasso, C’67, D’71
Seth M. Ginns, C’00 Thomas J. Hoskins, WG’77 Huron Consulting Services LLC Independence Foundation Shirley J. Jones-Shakur Barbara McNeil Jordan John B. and Nelly Llanos Kilroy Foundation Helen R. Kohler, Nu’60 Norma M. and Glenn Lang Marc H. Lipschutz, RES’78 National Kidney Foundation Mary Duffin Naylor, GNu’73, GR’82 Edward M. Resovsky, C’65 Denise A. Rotko, Nu’73, GNu’76 and Michael J. Rotko, L63 Rotko Family Foundation Adele K. Schaeffer, CW’55 and Harold G. Schaeffer Marilyn Sawyer Sommers, Nu’72 and Jeffrey D. Sommers, C’71 Diane L. Spatz, Nu’86, GNu’89, GR’95 Eileen M. Sporing, GNu’81 Stouffer College House Eileen Sullivan-Marx, HUP’72, Nu’76, GR’95 and Kenneth Marx Nancy M. Valentine, GNu’72 Ann Marie Walsh-Brennan, GNu’76, GR’97 Mark C. Watts Joanne T. Welsh, CW’52 and Raymond H. Welsh, W’53 Fay W. and Ralph R. Whitney, Jr.
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$250 - $999 Robert M. Allen, G’81, W’81 American Assembly of Men in Nursing Amgen, Inc. Frances E. Arlia, Nu’87 Henry P. Baer, Jr. Rebecca S. Bramen, Nu’96, GNu’98 and Darren A. Bramen, WG’99 Donna L. Brian, GNu’89, GR’96 and Barry Brian Joan McCabe Brinkerhoff, Nu’74 and James J. Brinkerhoff, WG’74 Rebecca H. Bryan, GNu’92 Francesca P. Cariello, GNu’85 Susan W. and Cummins Catherwood, Jr. Joan P. Chalikian, GNu’81 and David M. Chalikian, C’75, GR’81, M’84 Dianne S. Charsha, GNu’86 Melodie K. Chenevert Chubb & Son, Inc. Christopher Coleman Cynthia A. Connolly, Nu’80, GR’99, GNC’01 Mary B. Connolly Margaret M. Cotroneo, GNu’70 Terri Cox Glassen, Nu’91 and Lars A. Glassen, W’91 Karen G. Cunningham J P. Dellavalle, C’02 Lisa A. Digiorgio-Haag, Nu’83 Debra Censits Donnally, Nu’81, GNu’83 and Andrew J. Donnally, W’81 Barbara Doyle, Nu’86, GNu’94, GNC’96, WEV’09 Alison Dura, Nu’86 and Paul Andrew Dura, M’87 Cynthia J. Eiseman, GR’79 and James Eiseman, L’66 Maureen M. Ercole, HUP’75 and Robert Ercole, W’76 ExxonMobil Corporation Sarah E. Farkash, Nu’06, GNu’10 Abbe F. Fletman, L’88 Marilyn E. Flood Kathleen E. V. Gallagher, GNu’80 and Joseph W. Gallagher Vanessa N. Gamble, M’78, G’84, GR’87 William C. Garrow, WG’75 William Garrow Fund General Electric Eileen R. Giardino, Nu’76, GRD’89 and Angelo P. Giardino, GED’86, M’87, GR’99 Janet L. Golden Barbara and Barry Goldstein Gloria Hagopian Nancy P. Hanrahan, GR’04 Joan T. Hartnett, GED’62 Lydia K. Hebestreit, GNu’68 Debra A. Heffner, GNu’06
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Naomi H. Higuchi, Nu’86, GNu’92, GNC’97 Jane E. Hinkle, GED’99 Shirley Hui Julie D. Hunter, Nu’85, GNu’98 and Larry W. Hunter, W’84 HUP School of Nursing Alumni Association IBM Corporation Patricia W. Iyer, Nu’72, GNu’79 Mary Beth Jackson Susan O. Jaffe, CW’64 and Paul L. Jaffe, L’50 Peter Jeong, GNu’09 Jacqueline M. Jerrehian, HUP’55 and Aram K. Jerrehian, Jr., W’55 Johnson and Johnson Corporation Nancy Jane Douts Kato, Nu’83, GNu’85 and Norman S. Kato, M’81, INT88 Jeanne J. Kiefner Barbara S. Kiernan, GNu’71 Carolyn Payne Langfitt Marion C. Lapchak, Nu’71 Lynda Law Wilson Eli Lilly and Company Eileen Dolores Logan, Nu’75 Carolyn W. Long, Nu’67 Karen D. Lopez, Nu’85 and John J. Lopez, C’85 Judith S. Losben, CGS’00, CGS’07 Edith H. Lundquist, Nu’81, GNu’83 Sondra B. Mabry, Nu’62 Bruce Macleod Eileen M. Maloney-Wilensky, GNu’99 Anne Elizabeth Mavor, Nu’87, GNu’91 and Barry A. Bear, C’87 Kathleen M. McCauley, Nu’74, GNu’77, GRN’90, GNC’96 Afaf I. Meleis Barbara Lance Menin, GNu’95 Mathy and Andrew P. Mezey Leslie J. Miller, GNu’71 Michele Mittelman, HUP’74 Shirlene Moore Annette M. Munson, Nu’86, W’86 Ruth A. O’Brien, Nu’63 Karen F. Oxler, GNu’85 Patricia P. Pacinelli, Nu’59 Sue Parsell, Nu’60 Steven J. Peitzman, C’67 Rebecca A. Snyder Phillips, Nu’70, GNu’75 Louise and John H. Porter, W’55 John S. Price Anna I. Roberts Anna S. Roberts, Nu’86 and David R. Roberts
Angenette Nibecker Robinson, HUP’54, Nu’54 Bryan S. Romano, W’98 Letty Roth-Piper, Nu’69, GNu’76 and Arthur H. Piper, Jr. Marcia and Ronald Rubin Jean M. Samii, GNu’70 Jennifer Careen Sandoz, Nu’95 Alice B. Savastio, HUP’53 and Joseph Savastio Cynthia C. Scalzi, GNu’98 Eric C. Schneider Myrna B. Schnur, Nu’94, GNu’99 Frances C. Seehausen, Nu’78 Andrea J. Seidler, GNu’85 Kathleen O. Seidman, GNu’84 Jingjing Shang Susan E. Shapiro, Nu’72 Jill Sheridan Slattery, Nu’65 Robert T. Smithing, GNu’81 Marsha W. Snyder, Nu’74, M’80, LPS’12 Kathryn S. Sugerman, Nu’91, GNu’93 Beth Ann Swan, GNu’83, GRN’96 Wylie A. Thomas, G’96 University of Virginia Jeannine M. Uribe, GR’08 Grace Jones Vineyard, CW’66 Heidi A. Von Nieda, Nu’77 Mary McCormack Walton, Nu’74, GNu’81, GR’10, GR’12 Zhida Wang Paige K. Waterman, Nu’89 and John D. Waterman, W’89, ENG’90, WG’97 Rosalyn J. Watts, GNu’67 Anita and Alan J. Weber, W’70 Martha Edmonds Weiss, GNu’77 and Geoffrey Weiss Jean C. Whelan, GR’00, GR’02 and Mark Gilbert Stephen Wilensky Madeline D. Wiley, GNu’80 Zane Robinson Wolf, Nu’68, GRN’86 and Charles J. Wolf, III, M’69, INT73 Rita Carr Yucha, Nu’68 and Thomas J. Yucha
It is important to us that we list your name correctly. If an error is found, please contact Monica Salvia, Associate Director of Alumni and Donor Relations at 215.898.9773 or nursalum@pobox.upenn.edu.